Planting list
Canopy trees
Primary functions: wind shelter, leaf litter.
Black Alder (Alnus glutinosa). Fast growing, wind tolerant, deciduous. Nitrogen fixing.
Walnut (Juglans regia cultivars). Vulnerable to strong winds, deciduous. Pairing with a nitrogen-fixing tree (e.g. Alder) provides shelter and increased growth. Wind-pollinated, usually dioecious; nut production requires several trees of compatible cultivars.
Willow (Salix spp.). fast-growing, wind-tolerant, deciduous. Prefers proximity to waterways. Can be invasive if left unattended; on the other hand canes can be planted in winter and grown into hedges, fences, and archways. Crop: canes, spring.
Sub-canopy small trees
Hazelnut (Corylus spp.). Prefers waterways. Wind-tolerant, deciduous. Wind-pollinated, usually dioecious. Crop: hazelnuts, late summer; production requires several trees of compatible cultivars.
Feijoa (Acca sellowiana). Wind-tolerant, evergreen. Bees: flowers mid-late summer. Crop: feijoas, late autumn; optimum fruiting requires 2-3 varieties.
Cherry Guava (Psidium cattleianum). Evergreen. May be invasive if unchecked by frosts (check with DoC). Crop: fragrant red fruit, like feijoa but smaller and more sour.
All the orchard fruit species - apples, pears, stonefruit, etc. Sturdy heirloom species preferred for pest resistance, growth (increase yield with a co-planting guild - nitrofixers and mineral miners).
Small woody shrub layer
Rocoto Chilli (Capsicum pubescens). 10-15 years, mildly frost tolerant. Chillies, mid-late autumn, black seeds. Very hot, thick fleshy skins.[1]
Lemon Verbena (Aloysia citrodora). 15+ years, mildly frost tolerant. Leaves and shoots for tea, flowering bee plant.
Redcurrant & Blackcurrant
Climbers
Scarlet Runner Beans (Phaseolus coccineus). Perennial, 10+ years. Dies off each winter and re-sprouts from root tuber. Fixes nitrogen. Bees: all summer. Crop: runner beans.
Passionfruit.
Rose - thornless old-fashioned rambler varieties. wind-tolerant, deciduous. Bees: flowers late spring - early summer. Crop: rose-hips high in vitamin C. Flowers.
Ground Cover
Peppermint. Less vigorous, slower-growing, less invasive than common mint. Bees: all summer and autumn. Crop: peppermint leaves. Somewhat trample-tolerant.
Nasturtium. Dominant but easily controlled. It's about the only thing that can out-compete bindweed (Convolvulus spp.). Fixes nitrogen. Bees: flowers spring through autumn. Crop: peppery leaves, flowers.
Thyme.
Strawberries. Not trample-tolerant but can provide cover on litter and dampen out other weeds. Will spread by vegetative propagation in autumn, but easily shifted.
Nepalese raspberry. Slow-growing, non-invasive bramble species. Thornless. Crop: small raspberries. Moderately trample-tolerant.
Ground crops
Root species
Mineral accumulators, root crops.
Comfrey - mineral accumulator. Taproot up to 4m long mines zinc, magnesium, iron etc. from subsoil into leaves; crop & drop mulch. Plant around fruit tree drip line.
References
- ↑ DeWitt, D., Bosland, P.W. The Complete Chile Pepper Book. 2009, Timber Press.